4.8 Article

Metagenomic analysis indicates that stressors induce production of herpes-like viruses in the coral Porites compressa

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0808985105

Keywords

coral reefs; disease; Herpesviridae; viral-like particles; virome

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship [DBI-0511948]
  2. Marine Microbial Initiative
  3. Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation

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During the last several decades corals have been in decline and at least one-third of all coral species are now threatened with extinction. Coral disease has been a major contributor to this threat, but little is known about the responsible pathogens. To date most research has focused on bacterial and fungal diseases; however, viruses may also be important for coral health. Using a combination of empirical viral metagenomics and real-time PCR, we show that Porites compressa corals contain a suite of eukaryotic viruses, many related to the Herpesviridae. This coral-associated viral consortium was found to shift in response to abiotic stressors. In particular, when exposed to reduced pH, elevated nutrients, and thermal stress, the abundance of herpes-like viral sequences rapidly increased in 2 separate experiments. Herpes-like viral sequences were rarely detected in apparently healthy corals, but were abundant in a majority of stressed samples. In addition, surveys of the Nematostella and Hydra genomic projects demonstrate that even distantly related Cnidarians contain numerous herpes-like viral genes, likely as a result of latent or endogenous viral infection. These data support the hypotheses that corals experience viral infections, which are exacerbated by stress, and that herpes-like viruses are common in Cnidarians.

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